shroominator
Member
- Location
- Kansas City, MO
Hi all. Here is my situation.....
Remodeling a hospital floor. Emergency generator fed panel available. Feeding a number of 2x4, 3-lamp fluorescent fixtures in the corridors as emergency lighting. Here is where the fun part is:
The owner requires 2-level switching of the fixtures (inner lamp separately from outer lamps) with switching at the nurses station.
My solution - Run the outer lamp feeds through one mechanically held lighting contactor and the inner lamp feeds through another mechanically held lighting contactor. My thinking is, when power is lost and transfer to the generator occurs, the contacts will not open due to loss of coil voltage no matter how short of a time span that may be, as I think would happen with an electrically held lighting contactor. A mechanically held contactor requires a control signal to open the contacts doesn't it?
Is this an acceptable solution for my problem? I have seen elsewhere on this forum comments about contactors UL listed for emergency application, but I am unable to nail one down.
This one has me rubbing my head and I'm too bald for any more of that!
Thanks.
Remodeling a hospital floor. Emergency generator fed panel available. Feeding a number of 2x4, 3-lamp fluorescent fixtures in the corridors as emergency lighting. Here is where the fun part is:
The owner requires 2-level switching of the fixtures (inner lamp separately from outer lamps) with switching at the nurses station.
My solution - Run the outer lamp feeds through one mechanically held lighting contactor and the inner lamp feeds through another mechanically held lighting contactor. My thinking is, when power is lost and transfer to the generator occurs, the contacts will not open due to loss of coil voltage no matter how short of a time span that may be, as I think would happen with an electrically held lighting contactor. A mechanically held contactor requires a control signal to open the contacts doesn't it?
Is this an acceptable solution for my problem? I have seen elsewhere on this forum comments about contactors UL listed for emergency application, but I am unable to nail one down.
This one has me rubbing my head and I'm too bald for any more of that!
Thanks.